Barth’s contract details have been reported and it’s clear he wasn’t negotiating from a favorable position.

Following standard operating procedure, the Broncos rescued Barth from the streets in return for locking him up at minimum salaries through the 2016 season. He’s drawing a $730,000 minimum salary this year, $745,000 next year and $885,000 in 2016.

In the 32 hours or so between Tuesday morning and the report of training camp Wednesday evening, the Broncos should have first-round draft pick Sylvester Williams signed to a four-year contract.

Williams is a defensive tackle from North Carolina who the Broncos selected with their No. 28 overall pick. He can expect a four-year deal worth about $7.7 million with roughly $6.5 million guaranteed, including the same $4 million signing bonus that Green Bay’s Nick Perry received as the No. 28 overall pick in last year’s draft.

The first three years of salaries will be guaranteed in Williams’. There is some negotiating haggling regarding the non-guaranteed fourth season. Williams is the Broncos’ only remaining unsigned draft pick.

Peyton Manning takes in a chunk of change from the Broncos. But he’s not the team’s highest-paid player. (John Leyba, The Denver Post)

The Denver Broncos’ highest-paid players in 2012 were Peyton Manning and Elvis Dumervil. They were also the No. 1 and No. 3 highest salaries in the NFL in 2012. But that’s not entirely shocking if you’re keeping track. (Manning will cash in even more down the road, and Dumervil took home even more than that, really**).

Some of the other numbers, though, are certainly interesting. And they could be big clues about who gets a raise this offseason and who gets jettisoned.

The Broncos defense was among the highest-paid units in the NFL this season at somewhere near $66-71 million — that’s about 58 percent of the NFL salary cap (which was $120.6 million in 2012). The Denver offense accounted for only $55.2 million — that ranks 14th in the NFL.

The Broncos’ full salary and contract numbers from 2012 are after the jump.

Nicki Jhabvala is a Broncos beat writer for The Denver Post. She was previously the digital news editor for sports. Before arriving in Denver, she spent five years at Sports Illustrated working primarily as its online NBA editor. She also spent two years as a home page editor at the New York Times.